regis de banco coram, dominus Euball Thelwall miles, suprema curia cancellariæ magistrorum unus, et dominus Franciscus Barnham miles, executores etiam in testamento suprascript' nominat, ex certis causis eos et amicos suos in ea parte juste moven' oneri executionis testament' suprascript' expresse renuntiarunt, prout ex actis curiæ prædicť plenius liquet et apparet; de bene et fideliter administrando eadem ad sancta Dei evangelia in debita juris forma jurať.
LINTHWAITE FARRANT Registrar' deputat' assumpt',
The Marks i. ii. iii. iv. v. vi. denote the Volumes, and the Figures the Pages.
ABATOR, who is so called, iv. 99, how and when he may become lawful owner of another's lands ibid.
Abbot, George, archbishop of Canterbury
vi. 92, 113, 117
ii. 15
Abecedarium naturæ
iv. 389
ii. 374
Abettor, several ways of becoming so Abilities, natural, like plants, want pruning Abjuration, in what cases a man shall be obliged to abjure the realm, iv. 300, several cases thereof, with the proceedings relat- ing to them ibid. 301 Absolution, whether that in our liturgy is not improper, ii. 539, is of two sorts only ibid. Absque impetitione vasti, the sense and meaning of this clause cleared up, and stated by the words themselves, by reason, by authorities, by removing contrary authorities, by practice, iv. 226 to 232, it gives no grant of property, iv. 227, how this clause came first to be used iv. 228
![[ocr errors]](https://books.google.com.ni/books/content?id=LNlM47JR5q8C&output=html_text&pg=RA1-PA421&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&q=editions:UOMDLPaje6090_0003_001&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U22o8-f2WzCHOBNMrw2IfqYsEk-Ug&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=481,894,10,8)
![[ocr errors]](https://books.google.com.ni/books/content?id=LNlM47JR5q8C&output=html_text&pg=RA1-PA421&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&q=editions:UOMDLPaje6090_0003_001&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U22o8-f2WzCHOBNMrw2IfqYsEk-Ug&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=688,784,9,8)
![[ocr errors]](https://books.google.com.ni/books/content?id=LNlM47JR5q8C&output=html_text&pg=RA1-PA421&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&q=editions:UOMDLPaje6090_0003_001&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U22o8-f2WzCHOBNMrw2IfqYsEk-Ug&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=691,894,9,8)
Academics, acknowledged by all sects to be the best ii. 233 Acceleration of time in works of nature, i. 355, in clarification of liquor, ibid. in several maturations, i. 358, as of fruits, ibid. of drinks, ibid. of metals, i. 362. Acceleration of putrefaction, i. 364. Acceleration of birth, 372, of growth or stature, ibid. three means of it, 372, 373. Acceleration of germination, i. 391, by three means, namely, mending the nourishment, i. 393, comfort- ing the spirits of the plant, ibid. making way for the easy coming to the nourishment, ibid. Several pregnant instances thereof, i. 394, et seq. Acceleration of clarification in wine i. 518 Accessary, how one man may become so to the act of another done by his order
•
iv. 57
ii. 8
· V. 79
Aches in men's bodies foreshew rain and frost Acquests, new ones, more burden than strength Act, not to be confounded with the execution of the act, nor the iv. 18
intire act with the last part of it, instances Act of parliament, a rule to be observed where that is donor, iv. 195, five acts relating to the distinction of the body natural and po-
![[ocr errors]](https://books.google.com.ni/books/content?id=LNlM47JR5q8C&output=html_text&pg=RA1-PA421&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&q=editions:UOMDLPaje6090_0003_001&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U22o8-f2WzCHOBNMrw2IfqYsEk-Ug&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=699,1115,10,8)
![[ocr errors]](https://books.google.com.ni/books/content?id=LNlM47JR5q8C&output=html_text&pg=RA1-PA421&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&q=editions:UOMDLPaje6090_0003_001&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U22o8-f2WzCHOBNMrw2IfqYsEk-Ug&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=731,950,10,8)
![[ocr errors]](https://books.google.com.ni/books/content?id=LNlM47JR5q8C&output=html_text&pg=RA1-PA421&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&q=editions:UOMDLPaje6090_0003_001&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U22o8-f2WzCHOBNMrw2IfqYsEk-Ug&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=712,1421,10,9)
litic of the king explained, iv. 351, et seq. of 1 Jac. I. relating to the punishment of witchcraft
Acting in song graceful
iv. 386 ii. 346 ii. 371
ii. 329
Active men, wherein preferred to virtuous Actium, battle of, decided the empire of the world Administration, how a property in goods, &c. may be gained by letters thereof, iv. 128, 129, what bishop shall have the power of granting them in disputable cases, ibid. two cases in the deaths of executors and administrators where the ordinary shall admi- nister . iv. 130 Administrators, their office and authority in some particulars, iv. 130, in what cases the ordinary is to commit administration, ibid. they must execute their authority jointly, ibid. may retain ibid. Admiralty, how to be ordered after the union iii. 284 Adrian VI. . Adrian the emperor, ii. 441, mortally envied in others the qualities he excelled in, ii. 270, instances of his misplaced bounty and ex- pense iv. 376 Adversity, ii. 262, resembles miracles in its command over nature, ibid. fortitude its virtue proper . ibid. Advice, how to be given and taken ii. 371
ii. 427
·
iii. 429
Advice to Sir George Villiers
Vide Villiers.
![[ocr errors]](https://books.google.com.ni/books/content?id=LNlM47JR5q8C&output=html_text&pg=RA1-PA422&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&q=editions:UOMDLPaje6090_0003_001&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U2tL78r1wK7wFX5gzDDehjYKdrwdA&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=373,552,10,8)
Advocates, ii. 384, surprising that their confidence should prevail with judges, ibid. what is due to and from them ibid. Advowsons, cases relating thereto explained iv. 16, 45, 50 Ægypt hath little rain, i. 511. Ægyptian conserving bodies, i. 513, ibid.
their mummies
•
Æneas Sylvius, his remark on the conduct of the popes and lawyers, ii. 432, says, that had not Christianity been supported by mi- racles, it ought to be received for its honesty ii. 433 Equinoctial more tolerable for heat than the torrid zone, i. 388, three causes thereof i. 389 Æsop, his fable of the frogs in a great drought, ii. 236, of the cat and the fox, ii. 238, of the fainting man and death Ethiopes, fleshy and plump, why Aëtites, or eagle-stone Ætna compensateth the adjacent countries for the damages it doth,
ii. 240
i. 389
i. 312
i. 446
![[ocr errors]](https://books.google.com.ni/books/content?id=LNlM47JR5q8C&output=html_text&pg=RA1-PA422&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&q=editions:UOMDLPaje6090_0003_001&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U2tL78r1wK7wFX5gzDDehjYKdrwdA&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=588,1452,12,8)
![[ocr errors]](https://books.google.com.ni/books/content?id=LNlM47JR5q8C&output=html_text&pg=RA1-PA422&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&q=editions:UOMDLPaje6090_0003_001&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U2tL78r1wK7wFX5gzDDehjYKdrwdA&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=841,835,10,8)
![[ocr errors]](https://books.google.com.ni/books/content?id=LNlM47JR5q8C&output=html_text&pg=RA1-PA422&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&q=editions:UOMDLPaje6090_0003_001&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U2tL78r1wK7wFX5gzDDehjYKdrwdA&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=802,1257,10,8)
![[ocr errors]](https://books.google.com.ni/books/content?id=LNlM47JR5q8C&output=html_text&pg=RA1-PA422&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&q=editions:UOMDLPaje6090_0003_001&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U2tL78r1wK7wFX5gzDDehjYKdrwdA&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=838,1118,10,8)
Ætna and Vesuvius, why they shoot forth no water i. 519 Affectation of tyranny over men's understandings and beliefs ii. 78 Affections of beasts impressed upon inanimate things, ii. 69, three
affections which tie subjects to sovereigns, v. 190, no heat of af- fection without idleness iii. 499 Affidavits in chancery, in what cases not to be allowed iv. 521 Africa, why so fruitful of monsters, i. 410, the people there never stir out after the first showers ii. 2 Ayán, is always rightly translated charity in the Rhemish version, ii. 539 Agaric works most on phlegm, i. 433, a spongy excrescence on the roots of trees, ibid. 450, 459, a putrefaction i. 480 Agathocles ii. 413
Age. See Youth.
v. 414
Age of discretion, at what time allowed to be by our law Age, its excellency in four things, ii. 428, its inconveniencies and difficulties with regard to action ii. 355, 356 Agesilaus ii. 414
Agrippa raised by Augustus.
ii. 316
•
Agues cured by applications to the wrist, i. 289, proceed mostly from obstruction of the humours i. 366
Aid, a certain sum of money so called, its uses
iv. 104
Air turned into water, i. 254, by four several ways, i. 255, 256, in- stances tending thereto, i. 280, converted into a dense body, a rarity in nature, i. 255, 256, increases in weight, and yields nou- rishment, i. 257, hath an antipathy with tangible bodies, i. 281, converted into water by repercussion from hard bodies, ibid. Air turned into water by the same means that ice, i. 282, meddles little with the moisture of oil, i. 286, elision of air a term of igno- rance, i. 303. Air condensed into weight, i. 257, 503. Air pent the cause of sounds, i. 300, 301, 302, eruptions thereof cause sounds, i. 300. Air not always necessary to sounds, i. 304, 307, thickness of the air in night, contributes to the increasing and our better hearing of sounds, than in the day, as well as the ge- neral silence, i. 309. Air excluded in some bodies, prohibiteth putrefaction, i. 368, in some causeth it, ibid. the causes of each, ibid. Air compressed and blown, prohibiteth putrefaction, i. 370, congealing of air, i. 376. Airs wholesome, how found out, i. 516, 517, the putrefaction of air to be discerned aforehand, ii. 2, 3. Airs good to recover consumptions, ii. 54. Air healthful within doors, how procured ii. 55
ii. 6
Air aud fire foreshew winds Air, the causes of heat and cold in it, ii. 30, hath some degree of light in it
•
•
ibid. Air poisoned by art, ii. 50,why the middle region of it coldest, ii. 241 Albert Durer
ii. 357
![[ocr errors]](https://books.google.com.ni/books/content?id=LNlM47JR5q8C&output=html_text&pg=RA1-PA423&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&q=editions:UOMDLPaje6090_0003_001&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U1mtcAXCTMXRKSYDMYpoeqydhk6aA&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=503,340,10,8)
![[ocr errors]](https://books.google.com.ni/books/content?id=LNlM47JR5q8C&output=html_text&pg=RA1-PA423&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&q=editions:UOMDLPaje6090_0003_001&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U1mtcAXCTMXRKSYDMYpoeqydhk6aA&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=436,892,9,8)
![[ocr errors]](https://books.google.com.ni/books/content?id=LNlM47JR5q8C&output=html_text&pg=RA1-PA423&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&q=editions:UOMDLPaje6090_0003_001&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U1mtcAXCTMXRKSYDMYpoeqydhk6aA&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=311,1139,10,8)
![[ocr errors]](https://books.google.com.ni/books/content?id=LNlM47JR5q8C&output=html_text&pg=RA1-PA423&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&q=editions:UOMDLPaje6090_0003_001&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U1mtcAXCTMXRKSYDMYpoeqydhk6aA&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=686,891,10,8)
Alchemy, some remarks upon it
v. 312
Alchemists censured
i. 362
•
Alcibiades, his advice to Pericles about giving in his accounts, ii.
ii. 357
![[ocr errors]](https://books.google.com.ni/books/content?id=LNlM47JR5q8C&output=html_text&pg=RA1-PA423&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&q=editions:UOMDLPaje6090_0003_001&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U1mtcAXCTMXRKSYDMYpoeqydhk6aA&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=726,1056,10,8)
449, beautiful
Alexander, why his body sweet
i. 247
Alexander's body preserved till Cæsar Augustus's time, i. 514, his character of Antipater, ii. 439, of Hephæstion and Craterus, ibid. censured by Augustus, ii. 441, by Parmenio, ii. 442, contemned by Diogenes, ii. 446, would run with kings when advised by Philip to the olympic games, ii. 452, his saying to Callisthenes upon his two orations on the Macedonians, iv. 364, a smart reply of his to Parmenio . iii. 291 Alexander VI, sends the bishop of Concordia to mediate between the kings of England and France, v. 76, thanks Henry VII. for entering into a league in defence of Italy Alga marina applied to roots of plants furthers their growth i. 403 Alien, enemy, how considered by our laws, iv. 326, 327. Alien friend, how considered, ibid. Littleton's definition of an alien, iv. 346, how the several degrees of aliens are considered by our iii. 272, 273
·
v. 141
laws
« AnteriorContinuar » |